Near Miss Reported at LAX in August

An arriving jumbo jet takes evasive action when its pilot sees a plane on the runway.

An arriving Asiana Airlines jumbo jet narrowly missed a departing Southwest Airlines flight at Los Angeles International Airport last month after a controller mix-up that apparently placed both planes on the same runway, federal authorities confirmed Tuesday.

A captain aboard the Asiana Boeing 747-400, which was arriving from Inchon, South Korea, aborted the landing Aug. 19 and came within several hundred feet of a Southwest jet headed to Albuquerque, according to a report obtained by The Times.

The incident eerily resembles a 1991 accident on the same runway, in which 33 people died after a controller cleared a USAir jet to land on a runway where a commuter plane was waiting to take off.

That crash occurred at night, whereas last month's incident was at 2:55 p.m. in clear weather.

Confirmation came the same day the Federal Aviation Administration held a news conference in Washington to announce that near misses on the nation's runways are declining. At the event, officials said there had been no serious incidents involving commercial jets this year. An agency spokeswoman later explained that the LAX incident was still under investigation and had not been officially added to the statistics.

For The Record Los Angeles Times Saturday September 04, 2004 Home Edition Main News Part A Page 2 National Desk 1 inches; 44 words Type of Material: Correction LAX incident -- An article in Wednesday's California section about a near miss between an Asiana Airlines jumbo jet and a Southwest Airlines plane at Los Angeles International Airport referred to Aug. 19, when the incident occurred, as a Friday. It was a Thursday.

Nationally, the FAA reported a 20% drop in all runway safety incidents in federal fiscal years 2000 through 2003, and serious near misses declined by more than 50%. Serious incidents involving two jets declined even more markedly, from 15 in 2000 to two in 2003.

In the Asiana incident, initial reports from the control tower at LAX estimated that the jet flew within 200 feet of the Southwest aircraft, but just how close the planes ever were to each other is still under investigation by the National Transportation Safety Board.

"It's still too damned close," said a high-ranking FAA official who requested anonymity.

The incident is the closest call at the world's fifth-busiest airport in at least four years. The facility led the nation in near misses from 2000 to 2003, according to the FAA report released Tuesday.

At LAX, controllers orchestrate a complex choreography involving nearly 2,000 landings and takeoffs a day. The airport has two sets of parallel runways, one on the north side and the other on the south side.

The NTSB has obtained the black box recorders from the Southwest plane and has interviewed the captain and first officer. Investigators have requested a statement from the Asiana captain.

They are also examining radar data and recordings from the tower, and interviews with the controllers are being scheduled.

The incident followed a shift change in the tower. A controller told a colleague that the Asiana jet had been cleared to land on the inner runway on the airport's north side, according to interviews and records. But the first thing the second controller did was to clear the Southwest pilot to take off from the same runway.

The Southwest jet taxied into position and waited at the end of the runway. When the Asiana jet's captain was about a mile away from the airport, he saw the Southwest plane and took action to avoid it.

Seconds later, a ground radar system at LAX alerted the controller, who canceled the Southwest aircraft's takeoff clearance and told the Asiana pilot to "go around," records show. The 747 flew within several hundred feet of the Southwest jet about 10 seconds after the ground radar went off, according to a report.

The incident was initially considered so serious that the FAA classified it as a "Category A" near miss, or a runway incident that requires "extreme action to narrowly avoid a collision," but the incident will not be finally classified until after the NTSB investigation, sources said.

Controllers at LAX blamed the near miss on antiquated radar systems and understaffing during a busy Friday-afternoon rush, when scores of jets approach the airport and controllers must use all four runways for arriving aircraft. Controllers typically use two inner runways for takeoffs and two outer runways for landings.

"Either way, what happened that day ... was not optimal for aviation safety," said Mike Foote, an air traffic controller at LAX. But Foote said the ground radar "functioned as advertised."

That system, known as AMASS for Airport Movement Area Safety System, may become an issue in the probe of the incident. The FAA has relied on the new ground radar, in place at LAX and several dozen other busy airports nationwide, to warn controllers when planes are on a collision course.

But safety board experts, who favor a system in the cockpit that directly warns pilots, have questioned whether AMASS gives a timely warning. In computer simulations, some alerts have come only eight to 11 seconds before a collision would have occurred -- not enough time for controllers to figure out what is happening and warn pilots, and for pilots to then react.